🔥 Gate Square Event: #PostToWinNIGHT 🔥
Post anything related to NIGHT to join!
Market outlook, project thoughts, research takeaways, user experience — all count.
📅 Event Duration: Dec 10 08:00 - Dec 21 16:00 UTC
📌 How to Participate
1️⃣ Post on Gate Square (text, analysis, opinions, or image posts are all valid)
2️⃣ Add the hashtag #PostToWinNIGHT or #发帖赢代币NIGHT
🏆 Rewards (Total: 1,000 NIGHT)
🥇 Top 1: 200 NIGHT
🥈 Top 4: 100 NIGHT each
🥉 Top 10: 40 NIGHT each
📄 Notes
Content must be original (no plagiarism or repetitive spam)
Winners must complete Gate Square identity verification
Gat
While most people are still watching the K-line fluctuations of meme coins, a true game-changer is quietly taking place.
US leading mortgage service provider Pineapple Financial has made a bold move — moving its $10 billion mortgage assets entirely onto the blockchain, choosing Injective as the landing platform. This is not a small-scale test; it is a full-scale asset migration. Throughout the history of cryptocurrency development, there are hardly any other RWA on-chain actions of this scale.
To be frank: what is $10 billion worth? It exceeds the combined lock-up amounts of most current DeFi protocols, accounting for about 30% of the entire market’s daily trading volume. More importantly, the subsequent move — Pineapple plans to launch tokenized mortgage products directly on the chain.
What does this mean? In the future, ordinary people will be able to open their crypto wallets and buy the income rights from US real estate mortgages, earning stable cash flow returns. The high wall of traditional finance is being dismantled brick by brick by on-chain protocols.
What’s worth pondering is: why did the institution choose Injective?
While other public chains are still burning money to subsidize developers and boost data, Injective has quietly done a few things: first, its infrastructure is solid enough. For an institution like Pineapple to choose to land here, it must be because of the chain’s zero-slippage trading capabilities on the order book, as well as its natural support for compliant KYC—